Dear all, a busy start to the year—see below for a note from Tom Dietz 
discussing a trio of articles recently published (open access for a limited 
period) on the topic of “beyond politics” for climate change mitigation. Enjoy!

**
Colleagues:
I think some of you may be interested in this triptych on climate mitigation 
forthcoming in Energy Research and Social Science. It is available free open 
access until 12 February 2020 at the URLs below.
Best
Tom
+++
Gilligan, Jonathan M and Michael P Vandenbergh. 2020. "Private Climate 
Governance." Energy Research and Social Science 60:101400. doi: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2019.101400<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2019.101400>.

Abstract: The growing sense of urgency by the public for action to address 
climate change stands in stark contrast to the slow pace and limited 
accomplishments of national and international institutions to reduce greenhouse 
gas emissions. Political institutions face significant structural barriers to 
taking strong and rapid action to cut emissions, but private environmental 
governance has potential to avoid those barriers and achieve rapid emissions 
reductions. It appears unlikely that private governance alone can reduce 
emissions enough to stabilize the climate, but it does have the potential to 
reduce emissions sufficiently and quickly enough to buy time for enacting more 
comprehensive public governance measures. In this Perspective, we review what 
is known about private governance, present a framework for analyzing private 
governance initiatives, outline the prospects of the framework for 
understanding and guiding private governance, and identify future research 
priorities for applying this framework.

Open access:

https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1aHOS7tZ6Zn9yY<https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1aHOS7tZ6Zn9yY>
+++
Stern, Paul C and Thomas Dietz. 2020. "A Broader Social Science Research Agenda 
on Sustainability: Nongovernmental Influences on Climate Footprints." Energy 
Research and Social Science 60:101401.
doi: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2019.101401<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2019.101401>.

Abstract.  Vandenbergh and Gilligan's book Beyond Politics and their essay in 
this issue open up a broad and under-explored agenda of research to inform 
efforts to limit climate change. They focused largely on understanding how 
companies and other non-governmental entities can be important agents of 
change. We sketch the implications non-governmental action for research as well 
as how such research can underpin action. A focus on opportunities across the 
life cycles of goods and services that provide for human needs and wants points 
to four key questions for research. We also note key challenges for social 
science research, including involving researchers from areas of social science 
that have been little involved previously in research on limiting climate 
change. We hope these arguments can contribute to a more robust and 
generalizable social science that can make greater contributions to limiting 
climate change. We encourage fellow social scientists to pursue the research 
questions we raise.
Open access:
https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1aHlQ_oMjTBKCs<https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1aHlQ_oMjTBKCs>

+++


Chen, C.-F., Wang, Y., Adua, L., & Bai, H. (2020). Reducing Household Fossil 
Fuel Consumption by Enabling Technology and Behavior. Energy Research and 
Social Science, 60:101402.
 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2019.101402<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2019.101402>.
Inspired by Beyond Politics and extending its thesis focusing on the household 
sector’s potential in enabling energy efficiency technology and behavioral 
plasticity in reducing carbon emissions, we examine this sector’s critical role 
in the operation of grid-connected technologies, particularly electric vehicles 
(EVs) and demand response (DR), through the lens of private governance. In this 
perspective, we present a framework for understanding social-technological 
integration. We discuss the role of households’ actions in technology adoption 
and operation and utilities’ actions contributing to the impact of these 
technologies on emissions reduction. Our perspective attempts to offer a brief 
overview and some insights regarding the energy-saving potential from consumer 
initiatives and utility programs in motivating customers to adopt DR and EVs, 
while highlighting the behavioral challenges to realizing sufficient reductions 
in carbon emissions. We observe, indeed, that the household sector can 
contribute significantly to the reduction of carbon emissions with technical 
innovations that bring customers to the center of control and decision-making.
Open access:
https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1aM1U7tZ6ZnA0Q<https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1aM1U7tZ6ZnA0Q>


--
Thomas Dietz

-University Distinguished Professor of Environmental Science and Policy, 
Sociology and Animal Studies
Member: Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability, Center for Global 
Change and Earth Observation, Great Lakes Integrated Sciences and Assessments 
Center
Michigan State University
-Gund Affiliate, Gund Institute for the Environment, University of Vermont
environment.msu.edu<http://environment.msu.edu/>
sociology.msu.edu<http://sociology.msu.edu/>
animalstudies.msu.edu<http://animalstudies.msu.edu/>
csis.msu.edu<http://csis.msu.edu/>
globalchange.msu.edu/<http://globalchange.msu.edu/>
glisa.msu.edu<http://glisa.msu.edu/>




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